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Title: Teledermatology for Diagnosis and Management of Skin Conditions:


1
Teledermatology for Diagnosis and Management of
Skin Conditions
  • A Systematic Review of the Evidence

Erin M. Warshaw MD MS Chief, Dermatology
Section Assoc Professor , Dermatology UMN Core
Investigator, HSRD CCDOR Evidence-based Synthesis
Program Minneapolis VA Medical Center
2
Research Team
  • Nancy Greer, PhD
  • Yonatan Hillman, BA
  • Emily Hagel, MS
  • Roderick MacDonald, MS
  • Indulis Rutks, BS
  • Timothy Wilt, MD, MPH
  • ESP Program Director

3
Technical Expert Panel
  • Robert Delavalle, MD, PhD
  • VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System
  • Denver, CO
  • Dennis Oh, MD
  • San Francisco VA Medical Center
  • San Francisco, CO
  • John Whited, MD, MHS
  • Harry S. Truman Memorial VA Medical Center
  • Columbia, MO

4
Evidence-based Synthesis Program (ESP)
  • Funded by Health Services Research and
    Development (HSRD)
  • Purpose Timely, focused evidence reviews to
    support VA policy and practice and to set
    directions for future research
  • Veteran and VA-system focused
  • Products
  • Evidence synthesis reports
  • Succinct briefs for managers and leadership
  • Web Site http//www.hsrd.research.va.gov/publica
    tions/esp

5
Objectives
  • Summarize evidence for diagnostic / management
    accuracy and concordance for teledermatology as
    compared to usual care
  • Review data on clinical outcomes, costs and key
    implementation factors in teledermatology

6
TeledermatologyLive Interactive
Store and Forward
Univ of MN, Mercer Univ, US Military web sites
7
Background
  • Store and forward (SAF) more widely used in VA
  • 44 (19/43) of responding VA derm chiefs use TD
  • Of those, 89 (17 of 19) use SAF
  • 1 live interactive (LI)
  • 1 both SAF and LI
  • Despite implementation, info on diagnostic and
    management accuracy and concordance,
    cost-effectiveness, and impact on clinical
    management and patient outcomes are not well
    understood
  • Informal survey of VA dermatology chiefs,
    December 2009

8
Key Questions Diagnosis Management
  • 1. How does the accuracy and concordance of
    teledermatology compare to usual care (in-person
    dermatology) for the diagnosis of skin
    conditions?
  • 2 How does the accuracy and concordance of
    teledermatology compare to usual care (in-person
    dermatology) for the management of skin
    conditions?

9
Key Questions - Outcomes
  • 3. How do clinical outcomes of teledermatology
    compare to usual care (in-person dermatology) for
    skin conditions?
  • 4. How does the cost of teledermatology compare
    to usual care (in-person dermatology)?

10
Methods
  • Topic nominated by Center for Chronic Disease
    Outcomes Research (CCDOR), Minneapolis VAMC
  • Key questions developed with TEP
  • Literature search (MEDLINE, Cochran Trials
    Registry, PubMed) for
  • Clinical trials, systematic reviews, cost
    studies, implementation papers
  • 1990 to June 2009
  • Human subjects
  • Search terms remote consult/consultation,
    electronic mail, telecommunications,
    telemedicine, telepathology, dermatology,
    teledermatology

11
Methods
  • Inclusion Criteria
  • SAF or LI in English
  • controlled trial for Key Questions 1 and 2
    (diagnosis, management)
  • Exclusion Criteria
  • teledermatology using mobile phones
  • non-teledermatology settings
  • dermatopathology
  • computer-aided diagnoses only
  • survey studies with outcomes not related to
    questions
  • teledermatology as an educational tool
  • technology assessment only
  • remote monitoring of known diagnoses
  • patient-generated photos and/or history (no
    provider)
  • studies with one diagnosis only or only acne or
    warts
  • pediatric population only

12
Methods
  • Data extracted by 2 research associates ,
    verified by PI
  • Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies
    (QUADAS) instrument used to assess study quality
    of studies related to diagnostic accuracy and
    concordance
  • Results presented by outcome and method of
    outcome reporting
  • stratified by SAF or LI technology
  • weighted mean differences where appropriate
    (limited pooling due to heterogeneity)
  • Whiting et al., BMC Medical Research
    Methodology, 2003

13
Results
Search Result657 References
Abstracts Excluded473
Full Text Review184
Full Text Excluded100
Included Studies85
Recent Publication1
Diagnosis/Management Questions (1 ,2) 50
Outcomes Questions (3, 4, 5)26
14
Definition - Diagnostic Accuracy
  • Match of TD or CD diagnosis with gold standard
    diagnosis (histopathology or other laboratory
    test)
  • Aggregated
  • match of primary or differential diagnoses with
    gold standard diagnosis
  • Primary
  • match of primary diagnosis with gold standard
    diagnosis

15
Definition - Management Accuracy
  • Match of TD or CD management plan with gold
    standard management plan

16
Definitions - Concordance
  • Diagnostic concordance
  • Aggregated - agreement of TD primary or
    differential diagnoses with CD primary or
    differential diagnosis
  • Primary - agreement of primary TD diagnosis with
    primary CD diagnosis
  • Management concordance
  • agreement of TD and CD management plans

17
Results Q1,2 Diagnosis Management41 SAF
studies (42 publications)
  • 40 repeated measures studies, 1 randomized trial
  • 12 U.S., 9 U.K., 6 Italy, 4 Spain, 3
    Australia/New Zealand, 2 Turkey
  • 5 studies - U.S. Military Personnel or Veterans
  • 12-882 subjects per study
  • Mean age53 years (19 studies)
  • 43 female (21 studies)
  • 93 Caucasian (5 studies)
  • Rashes and lesions (14 studies)
  • Lesions only (22 studies)

18
QUADAS Results SAF
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20
Results Diagnostic Accuracy SAF
  • TD Accuracy vs. CD Accuracy, Weighted Mean
    Difference
  • Aggregated Diagnostic Accuracy -19
  • range -28 to 18
  • 6 studies
  • Teledermatology minus Usual Care

21
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Results Diagnostic Accuracy SAF
  • TD Accuracy vs. CD Accuracy, Weighted Mean
    Difference
  • Primary Diagnostic Accuracy -11
  • range -54 to 11
  • 11 studies
  • Primary Diagnostic Accuracy, Pigmented Lesions
    Only -5
  • range -9 to 11
  • 6 studies
  • Teledermatology minus Usual Care

23
Other Results Diagnostic Accuracy
  • Kappa Statistic SAF
  • Teledermatology k 0.44 to 0.94 (4 studies)
  • Usual Care k 0.52 to 0.70 (1 study)
  • Sensitivity SAF 0.91 (1 study)
  • Specificity SAF 0.95 (1 study)
  • Live Interactive (1 study)
  • Aggregated diagnostic accuracy
  • Teledermatology73 Usual Care64

24
Results Diagnostic Concordance SAF
  • Primary Concordance
  • Pigmented skin lesions 91 (1 study)
  • Skin lesions 53-80 (5 studies)
  • General studies 46-88 (14 studies)
  • Aggregated Concordance
  • Skin lesions 64-100 (4 studies)
  • General studies 60-100 (10 studies)

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Other Results Diagnostic Concordance
  • Kappa statistic SAF k 0.71 to 0.93 (4 studies)
  • Sensitivity SAF 0.88-1.00 (3 studies)
  • Specificity SAF 0.39-0.98 (3 studies)
  • Live Interactive
  • Aggregated 78-99 (5 studies)
  • Primary 57-78 (7 studies)
  • Kappa statistic k 0.62-0.79 (2 studies)

28
Results Management SAF
  • Accuracy
  • Teledermatology 75.3 vs. Usual Care 75.9
  • Weighted Mean Diff -0.6
  • range -5 to 5
  • 2 studies
  • Teledermatology minus Usual Care

29
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Other Results Management
  • Concordance
  • Percent concordant 55-96 (8 studies)
  • Kappa statistic k 0.68-0.75 (4 studies)
  • Sensitivity Specificity 1.0 (1 study)
  • Live Interactive
  • Percent Concordant 64-75 (3 studies)
  • Kappa statistic k 0.71 (1 study)

31
Conclusions Diagnosis Management
  1. Diagnostic accuracy of in-person dermatology is
    better than SAF teledermatology.
  2. Diagnostic concordance of SAF teledermatology
    with in-person dermatology is acceptable.
  3. There is limited data on management accuracy two
    studies show equivalence
  4. Management concordance is moderate to very good.

32
Key Question 3 Clinical Course
  • Three studies (2 SAF, 1 LI)
  • - two suggested more favorable clinical course
    following TD compared to UC
  • - third study (VA/DoD n508) reported no
    difference
  • Different methods for determining clinical
    course
  • - clinic visit, photos, questionnaire
  • Clinical course assessed at different time points
  • - first clinic visit, 4 months, 6 months

33
Patient Satisfaction
  • Four SAF studies with usual care comparison group
  • randomized controlled trial
  • VA studies

Teledermatology Usual Care
3.8/5 (5 point scale) 3.8/5 (5 point scale)
84 satisfied overall 87 satisfied overall
86 very satisfied 98 very satisfied
79 excellent or very good 78 excellent or very good
34
Patient Preference
  • Four SAF studies
  • randomized controlled trial VA studies
  • Similar findings for live interactive studies

Teledermatology Usual Care
76 preferred TD over waiting for UC
42 preferred TD over UC 37 preferred UC over TD
68 TD as good as UC 40 prefer UC to TD
42 preferred TD over waiting for UC 38 prefer UC
35
Clinic Visits Avoided
  • SAF of pts not requiring derm clinic visit (2
    studies)
  • Percentage of visits avoided in studies with no
    comparison group 12.8 to 53.3 (7 studies)
  • LI 14 and 1 differences reported (2 studies)
  • 72.0 did not need follow-up (1 study)

Teledermatology Usual Care Difference
39.0 18.3 20.7
66.0 38.0 28.0
36
Summary Clinical Outcomes
  1. There is insufficient data to determine whether
    clinical course is impacted by SAF
    teledermatology vs. in-person dermatology.
  2. Waiting time for usual care (in-person
    dermatology) appointments was a factor in patient
    preference for teledermatology.
  3. In-person dermatology visits can be avoided when
    teledermatology is used.

37
Key Question 4 Cost
  • SAF (3 studies)
  • 1 VA (Whited 275 pts RCT)
  • cost-effective but not cost-saving
  • 1 DoD (Pak 698 pts RCT)
  • cost savings of 32/pt accounting for lost
    productivity
  • LI (6 studies)
  • 2 US (Burgiss 87 pts Armstrong 451 TD visits)
  • cost less or was cost efficient, if pts had long
    travel or if met criteria for volume and usual
    care costs
  • LI vs. SAF (1 study, UK Loane 102 pts)
  • SF less expensive but less clinically efficient
    than LI

38
Key Question 4 Summary - Cost
  • Limited by various parameters and perspectives
    (societal, health service or patient)
  • Most found telederm to be cost effective if
  • Far patient distance
  • High telederm volume
  • High costs of usual care

39
Overall Conclusions
  1. Diagnostic accuracy of in-person dermatology is
    better than SAF teledermatology
  2. Diagnostic concordance of SAF teledermatology
    with in-person dermatology is acceptable
  3. Management concordance is moderate to very good
  4. Limited data on management accuracy, clinical
    outcomes
  5. Pt satisfaction/preference good dep on distance
  6. Cost-effectiveness also dep on cost usual care,
    distance, volume

40
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